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Haiti Relief Voyage - Update from Jamaica
Philip
02/10/2010, Erroll Flynn Marina - Jamaica

Sitting here at a small internet Cafe, surrounded by the tropical paradise of Jamaica, I find my thoughts returning to Haiti. We are waiting for a shipment of diesel fuel to arrive tomorrow at the marina, so we can sail back to Miami, and plan the next relief voyage. The people of Haiti, are going to need much aid and comfort, and my concern is that the attention of the madia will shift away to other issues, and people will forget about the suffering we saw in Jacmel.

Thanks to all of you who helped make our voyage a success so far. We will soon have a video and photos of the voyage posted here when we return.

In the meantime this picture is of Greg, who we discovered has a talent for juggling. We stayed behind in Haiti, and this picture of him entertaining the kids at the orphanage, shows where his heart is. Greg was an awesome crew member, and we are glad he is on the ground in Haiti, bringing smiles to the faces of the kids there.

The full story of his visit to the orphanage, and pictures of Liberty arriving, can be found at this blogs post here.

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Delayed Arrival in Jamaica
Sharon du Plessis
02/09/2010

Schooner Liberty made it into Jamaica early this morning. They were delayed due to lack of wind and, running low on fuel, they didn't want to run engine. They made it a day later than expected, but came in to anchor off the coast early this morning, at about 4:30 am, and were ready to move in to a mooring at first light today. We wish them all a peaceful rest in Jamaica. They will be filling up with fuel and reprovisioning on fresh food and gaining one fresh new crew member, before leaving there again to continue the trip north.

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Successful Discharge in Jacmel
Sharon du Plessis
02/07/2010, Caribbean Sea

It was great to hear that our boat and crew arrived safely in Jacmel, Haiti yesterday late morning. They had an uneventful docking at the main cargo dock there. After some interesting dockside negotiations between various organizations, some whom our load of cargo had been designated for and others to whom it was not, the cargo load was discharged and handed over to those to whom we had been commissioned to give it. The off-loading process itself only took a few hours with the help of our awesome crew and by afternoon yesterday the boat, minus the few crew members who disembarked in Haiti for further relief work, set sail again for Jamaica. We have already made preparation for them to dock in Jamaica for a couple of days to rest and reprovision, as well as to pick up a fresh new crew member, before returning to Miami, via the Florida Keys. We are expecting them to arrive in Jamaica by first light tomorrow morning. I can't wait to speak with them once they get there.
Thank you all for your continued support and well wishes during this time. If any of your would like to be involved by supporting financially or in any other way in preparation for our next trip to Haiti, please comment on the blog or email me at liberty.schooner@gmail.com.

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In Haiti
Sharon du Plessis
02/06/2010

Latest news: Liberty has arrived in Jacmel, Haiti.

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Looking Back
Sharon du Plessis
02/06/2010, Miami, FL

As the Liberty is approaching her port of destination, I am sipping on my morning cup of tea and remembering all the events that led up to her departure. One of the stories that many of you may not have heard yet is definitely worthy of blogging. This eye witness account was written by crew member, Greg:

"Ship steward Monica and I had a simple task: go to a specific address, pickup the two pallets of medical supplies and food that we found there, bring them back to the ship. This would have been easy, but I'll tell you the punchline first: we were given the wrong address.

We drove across Miami, searching for the address we'd been given, and finally found it: a Haitian church in a decaying neighborhood. We drove up and said that we were here to pick up the medical supplies and food. We didn't realize that we were at the wrong address. And the Haitian church community there didn't yet realize that we, a heavily tattooed girl and a guy with videocameras wearing camo shorts, weren't the people from Dade/Broward County who they'd been waiting for who were SUPPOSED to pick up the supplies. Regardless, this church happened to have pallets of food and medical supplies too. We backed our workvan up to where they told us to go and started loading the supplies.

Soon enough, the looks we were getting became less friendly and more critical and we didn't understand why. We don't speak Creole, and my french only goes as far as fries, so we didn't yet realize that the people there had begun to question if we were really County officials afterall. We were oblivious and kept loading our van, oblivious to the fact that about twenty church-going folks now were becoming convinced that we were criminals, stealing the supplies that they'd so faithfully amassed for Haitian relief.

A man approached with a cell phone and asked me to talk into it. The pastor of the church was at the other end of the phone. He told me that we'd need to unload and leave the supplies. Monica and I were completely confused. We didn't know why they'd changed their minds. They didn't know why we were stealing their stuff. It was about ten minutes into that conversation when Monica realized that we were at the wrong address. Instant conundrum: do we unload and leave, thus letting the church think that we really WERE criminals, caught in the act and who then bid a hasty farewell? Or do we stay, while the pastor called the County to see if we could take a vanload, since we were bound for Haiti within hours (and the County has spent two weeks determining when/how/who will even pick up the supplies that were there). We decided to sit tight.

A few minutes later, the call came in. We were clear. The pastor felt that the supplies getting to Haiti was a better call than to let them sit, regardless of who we were. The attitude of the churchgoers changed instantly, to all smiles. They invited us into the church and gave us the best of the medical supplies and we loaded the van full, essentially playing Tetris with boxes until not a square inch of space in the back of the van remained. Then we drove away, waving goodbye, with a vanload of medical supplies that weren't intended for us, and two pallets of supplies still somewhere else in Miami, sitting waiting for us for another day. We'll get them for the next trip! Keep in touch and please support all of us on this incredible endeavor. Go Liberty Schooner!!"

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Message from Olga
Sharon du Plessis
02/06/2010

Latest update from crew member, Geert's wife from last night:

The following comment was left on your SailBlog:

Olga says:

Hello Sharon, I talked to Geert at 8:30 pm and they still have 80 miles to go to Jacmel. The were off Ile a Vache. The tradewinds (from the East) are slowing them down. Tomorrow 9 am wind is to turn to SE and at noon to S. They should be in Jacmel before noon. The mayor and others are expecting them. Best regards, Olga

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